In March 2015,
Frédéric Garcia and Anne-Charlotte Rémy invested and bought the Winfield Racing School brand. Adding
Historic Racing, brought in by Laurent Fort (Winfield Héritage) to the line of activities, the school offers a Formula 1 driving experience day to wealthy enthusiasts in addition to the traditional schooling for young racing drivers, occupying the modern facilities at
Paul Ricard circuit previously used by
Renault F1 and
Toyota F1 teams. The school also relaunched in
2018 the "Volant Winfield" and the "Trophée Winfield", The 2018 Volant Winfield winner, Brazilian
Caio Collet, was crowned
Formula 4 French champion the same year and has been a member of the
Renault Sport Academy since
2019.
Théo Pourchaire, winner of the 2018 Trophée Winfield, won the German
Formula 4 championship in 2019 and made his debut in
Formula Three the following year. The 2019 Volant Winfield was won by Jules Mettetal, while the 2019 Trophée Winfield (reserved for drivers under 16) was claimed by
Isack Hadjar, then aged 14. At the same event,
Doriane Pin (aged 15) was recognised as the best female driver and received a prize from the FIA Women in Motorsport Commission, earning a preparation day and two Formula 4 test days with the FFSA Academy. Hadjar subsequently reached
Formula One in 2025 with
Racing Bulls, before moving to
Red Bull Racing for 2026, becoming the first Algerian driver in Formula 1. Pin won the
F1 Academy championship in 2025 and has been a
Mercedes Formula 1 development driver since 2026. In 2023,
Adrien Closmenil, supported by the Winfield Racing School, made his debut in the
French Formula 4 Championship. He subsequently moved to endurance racing in the LMP3 category and won the
European Le Mans Series championship in 2025. ==Notable students==